Cliff Schecht wrote: With that said, there is a dramatic difference in those plots that is hard to ignore. I don't buy into the boutique cap thing and TBH would be pretty pissed if I spent money on signal caps only to have to wait 100+ hours for the "magic" to happen. This to me is a part that changes specs dramatically over a short period of time and in any other engineering situation would be considered a crappy part!
Hi Cliff,
New vacuum tube amps have an infant tone stage of between 40 to 60 hours, sometimes longer. but Leo Fender never burned in a guitar amplifier any more that he matched power tubes. 
I would include the infant tone period to include re-capping of the signal caps.  Then, again some caps do not exhibit much change. Polypropylene sound harsh to my ears, and stays that way. Polystyrene caps do not. Both of these plastics caps are supposed to be "distortion' free. Polyester caps do add some distortion (harmonics).
One hundred hours is a typical Hi-Fi stereo burn in time for new pre-amp tubes which originally I dismissed as psycho-acoustic  or power of suggestion until I re-tubed an amp, discovered the sound stage etc improve at after 100 hours, which I had to add up the time, which I hadn't paid attention to, but kept notes.
Do caps have an infant tone? How much, if any depends on the cap.  I wouldn't expect any with ceramic discs, but these vary with frequency and temperature. The disc doesn't sound so hot except at a few values in the tone stack, to some.  I use other types of caps in these position. I do use ceramic discs in the power supply in a few key places. 
I copied this from another forum I haunt, Powerscaling.com, from a while back, which might be relevent to the Sozo polyester caps:
"Distortion tests have been made on ceramics, polys and electrolytics, but has anyone done proper tests with paper in oil? I consider that to be an obsolete type, generally replaced by polypropylene.
 Polyester exhibits odd-order THD at increasing levels as signal voltage across the cap increases. THD rises faster than signal level.
Polystyrene and polypropylene are both distortion-free for pretty much any application. Their only down-side is size, cost and?or availability. I would use polypropylene coupling caps in the restoration of the amp above. (Leak Stereo)
Ceramics are good for low values of <47pF or <100pF depending on who's tests you believe."
And
"Doug Self conducted tests using basic circuits and an Audio Precision test system so the results are completely unbiased.
The results I reported were from tests Self did, confirming previous assessments by Cyril Bateman, and even further back by Marsh and Leech (or was it Marsh and Jung?). Each used the analytical tools and test equipment available in their era - not listening tests.
Years ago, Chris Russell of Bryston suggested the lower limit value for ceramics. His amps have performance THD levels that are buried within the noise of the AP-sys.2 - an output fuse or relay contact swamps the distortion of the entire amp. Note the claimed THD for his amps is at least an order of magnitude higher than exhibited THD."
"There are still polyester, ceramic and electrolytic bypass caps to impart their qualities. Note that my amps do not rely on the OT  for tone (KOC uses full bandwidth toroid and ei OTs), so that veil of distortion is not present and has to be "made up" in another way."
Not to be a troll, however the Sozos or Jupiters, etc are attempting to recreate a cap from an earlier time, freckles, warts, and all. Like vacuum tubes, they represent older technology which was flawed and far from perfect. However, it is the some of the flaws that produce the tonal signatures that generations of guitarist have grown up on. Transistors and PP caps with all their improvements haven't been able to get close to the popularity of vacuum tube amps.   
Best Regards, 
Steve